The Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) recently released a report on U.S. military personnel policy that, among other things, recommends registering women for the draft and giving all young people the military’s aptitude test when they register.

BPC has been criticized in the past for producing reports with conclusions that serve to benefit companies and industries that financially contribute to the non-profit organization. In this case, it’s not clear what has driven BPC to produce a report that focuses primarily on making civilian society a more accessible resource for the military. Possibly it’s because the BPC organization is so thoroughly embedded with representatives of militaristic culture.

Another recommendation of the report is to expand the college Reserve Officer Training Corps to all levels of higher education, including providing ROTC access to postgraduate and community-college students. Some dangerous implications of this would include:

deepening the educational system’s dependency on financing that is controlled by the Pentagon,

increasing direct involvement of campuses in war preparation; and

further normalizing militarism in the general educational environment.

The reason given for requiring all young people to take the military’s aptitude test is that it would allow the selective drafting of individuals based on skill sets. The test, the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery, is part of the military entrance process and is used to predict how people might perform in different military jobs.

Giving it to every teenager when they register with Selective Service wouldn’t change the reality that the test does not reveal actual skill sets, especially when it is administered to people who, at 18 years old, have had little skills training and work experience. Furthermore, imposing the test on as yet un-drafted civilians would be difficult, if not impossible, because of the strong resistance it would likely trigger. If people were forced to take the test, they could very effectively subvert it by deliberately giving wrong answers.

Some of the ideas in the report might be too controversial or impractical to take seriously, but it does give us reason for concern by adding additional momentum to the push to expand draft registration to women. Instead, what we should be having is greater discussion around the option of totally abolishing draft registration and taking steps to demilitarize society.

This article is from Draft NOtices, the newsletter of the Committee Opposed to Militarism and the Draft (http://www.comdsd.org/).

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Mandatory draft is not a bad idea.But it should be mandatory government service for all. This is the case in many countries. You would be required to give a certain amount of time to your country feeding the homeless, filling pot holes, military, building trails in parks some kind of government service. In return maybe there is life long health care, College at very low cost .
Of course in this county it might not work because the rich would probably be able to buy their way out of it.

This proposal goes completely against what we should be doing; divesting ourselves of participating and paying for the incredibly over-funded militarism and massive military/industrial complex that is not only bankrupting this country but has infested every aspect of life in the United States. Cut the Pentagon budget by half and we’d still be spending more on our military than any other country in the world, and that money would go a long way towards fixing the social ills that we suffer under.

We see little kids running around in military-copied ‘camo’ clothes, woman wanting the ‘right’ to kill people in combat (are you all crazy?), police using military war gear on our civilian population going directly against the rights our Constitution guarantees us (how many readers here have actually read the Bill of Rights?), and now those that directly profit from war want to test every single young person to see where they will fit in the every-growing and omnipresent war machine our country has turned into? Outrageous!

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